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<rdf:RDF xmlns:schema="https://schema.org/" xmlns:rdf="https://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"><schema:VisualArtwork><schema:image>/internal/media/dispatcher/92738/full</schema:image><schema:name>June Roses</schema:name><schema:dateCreated>1898</schema:dateCreated><schema:creator>[Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh]</schema:creator><schema:creator>Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh</schema:creator><schema:artMedium>Pencil and water-based color on paper</schema:artMedium><schema:description>Delicate rose tendrils sinuously curl around the figure of a young woman. Her eyes closed, she turns to face four nude infants, who study her with curiosity. This watercolor in delicate shades of green by Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh was the first work by a non-Austrian female artist to be acquired by the Modern Gallery in Vienna. It entered the collection in 1903, the year the museum was founded. Macdonald was a key exponent of Scottish Art Nouveau and her innovative visual language, which dispensed with any sense of depth, significantly influenced Gustav Klimt and the planar, linear art that emerged in Vienna.  
 </schema:description><schema:artForm>Drawing art</schema:artForm><schema:url>https://sammlungtest.belvedere.at/objects/6306/rdf</schema:url></schema:VisualArtwork></rdf:RDF>